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Gonzales v. Marcos G.R. No.

L-31685 1 of 5

Republic of the Philippines


SUPREME COURT
Manila
EN BANC

G.R. No. L-31685 July 31, 1975


RAMON A. GONZALES, petitioner,
vs.
IMELDA R. MARCOS, as Chairman of the Cultural Center of the Philippines, Father HORACIO DE LA
COSTA, I. P. SOLIONGCO, ERNESTO RUFINO, ANTONIO MADRIGAL, and ANDRES SORIANO, as
Members thereof, respondents.
Ramon A. Gonzales in his own behalf.
Acting Solicitor General Hugo E. Gutierrez; Jr. and Assistant Solicitor General Reynato S. Puno for respondent
Imelda R. Marcos.
Siguion Reyna, Montecillo, Beto and Ongsiako for respondents.

FERNANDO, J.:
It was the novelty of the constitutional question raised, there being an imputation by petitioner Ramon A. Gonzales
of an impermissible encroachment by the President of the Philippines on the legislative prerogative, that led this
Tribunal to give due course to an appeal by certiorari from an order of dismissal by the Court of First Instance of
Manila. 1 More specifically, the issue centered on the validity of the creation in Executive Order No. 30 of a trust
for the benefit of the Filipino people under the name and style of the Cultural Center of the Philippines entrusted
with the task to construct a national theatre, a national music hall, an arts building and facilities, to awaken our
people's consciousness in the nation's cultural heritage and to encourage its assistance in the preservation,
promotion, enhancement and development thereof, with the Board of Trustees to be appointed by the President, the
Center having as its estate the real and personal property vested in it as well as donations received, financial
commitments that could thereafter be collected, and gifts that may be forthcoming in the future. 2 It was likewise
alleged that the Board of Trustees did accept donations from the private sector and did secure from the Chemical
Bank of New York a loan of $5 million guaranteed by the National Investment & Development Corporation as well
as $3.5 million received from President Johnson of the United States in the concept of war damage funds, all
intended for the construction of the Cultural Center building estimated to cost P48 million. The Board of Trustees
has as its Chairman the First Lady, Imelda Romualdez Marcos, who is named as the principal respondent. 3 In an
order of dismissal by the then Judge, now Justice of the Court of Appeals, Jose G. Bautista of a suit for prohibition
filed in the Court of First Instance of Manila, stress was laid on the funds administered by the Center as coming
from donations and contributions, with not a single centavo raised by taxation, and the absence of any pecuniary or
monetary interest of petitioner that could in any wise be prejudiced distinct from those of the general public.
Moreover, reference was made to the admission by petitioner of the desirability of the objective of Executive Order
No. 30, his objection arising from the alleged illegality of its issuance. 4
Gonzales v. Marcos G.R. No. L-31685 2 of 5

There was a motion of respondents to file a motion to dismiss this appeal by certiorari, and it was granted in a
resolution of March 5, 1970. Such a pleading was submitted to this Court twelve days later, where it was contended
that Executive Order No. 30 represented the legitimate exercise of executive power, there being no invasion of the
legislative domain and that it was supplementary to rather than a disregard of Republic Act No. 4165 creating the
National Commission on Culture. In this exhaustive motion to dismiss, the point was likewise raised that petitioner
did not have the requisite personality to contest as a taxpayer the validity of the executive order in question, as the
funds held by the Cultural Center came from donations and contributions, not one centavo being raised by taxation.
5 Thereafter, a manifestation was filed by the then Solicitor General, now Associate Justice, Felix Q. Antonio,
adopting "the Motion to Dismiss the Petition dated February 25, 1970, filed by respondents with this Honorable
Court." 6 There was an opposition to such motion to dismiss on the part of petitioner. 7 That was the status of the
case, there being no further pleadings filed except two motions for extension of time to file answer submitted by
the Solicitor General and granted by this Court, when on July 22, 1975, there was a second motion to dismiss on
the part of respondents through the Acting Solicitor General Hugo E. Gutierrez Jr. and Assistant Solicitor General
Reynato S. Puno. It is therein set forth: "(1) As stated in the petition itself its undeniable quintessence is [the
allegation of] "an executive usurpation of legislative powers, hence, respondents in enforcing the same, are acting
without jurisdiction, hence, are restrainable by prohibition." ... (2) On October 5, 1972, Presidential Decree No.
15 ... was promulgated creating the Cultural Center of the Philippines, defining its objectives, powers and functions
and other purposes. Section 4, thereof was amended by Presidential Decree No. 179 ... enacted on April 26, 1973.
It is submitted that it is now moot and academic to discuss the constitutionality of Executive Order No. 30
considering the promulgation of PD Nos. 15 and 179, done by the President in the exercise of legislative powers
under martial law. Executive Order No. 30 has ceased to exist while PD Nos. 15 and 179 meet all the constitutional
arguments raised in the petition at bar." 8

It would thus appear that the petition cannot succeed. There is no justification for setting aside the order of
dismissal. Notwithstanding the exhaustive and scholarly pleadings submitted by petitioner on his own behalf, the
burden of persuasion to warrant a reversal of the action of the lower court was not met. Both on procedural and
substantive grounds, a case for prohibition was not made out, notwithstanding the valiant efforts of petitioner. With
this latest manifestation, that Executive Order No. 30 had been superseded by Presidential Decree Nos. 15 and 179,
the moot and academic character of this appeal by certiorari became rather obvious. To repeat, the petition must
fail.
1. It may not be amiss though to consider briefly both the procedural and substantive grounds that led to the lower
court's order of dismissal. It was therein pointed out as "one more valid reason" why such an outcome was
unavoidable that "the funds administered by the President of the Philippines came from donations [and]
contributions [not] by taxation." Accordingly, there was that absence of the "requisite pecuniary or monetary
interest." 9 The stand of the lower court finds support in judicial precedents. 10 This is not to retreat from the liberal
approach followed in Pascual v. Secretary of Public Works, 11 foreshadowed by People v. Vera, 12 where the
doctrine of standing was first fully discussed. It is only to make clear that petitioner, judged by orthodox legal
learning, has not satisfied the elemental requisite for a taxpayer's suit. Moreover, even on the assumption that
public funds raised by taxation were involved, it does not necessarily follow that such kind of an action to assail
the validity of a legislative or executive act has to be passed upon. This Court, as held in the recent case of Tan v.
Macapagal, 13 "is not devoid of discretion as to whether or not it should be entertained." 14 The lower court thus
did not err in so viewing the situation.
Gonzales v. Marcos G.R. No. L-31685 3 of 5

2. Nor was the lower court any more impressed by the contention that there was an encroachment on the legislative
prerogative discernible in the issuance of Executive Order No. 30. It first took note of the exchange of diplomatic
notes between the Republic of the Philippines and the United States as to the use of a special fund coming from the
latter for a Philippine cultural development project. Then, as set forth in the order of dismissal, it explained why no
constitutional objection could be validly interposed. Thus: "When the President, therefore, acted by disposing of a
matter of general concern (Section 63, Rev. Adm. Code) in accord with the constitutional injunction to promote arts
and letters (Section 4, Article XIV, Constitution of the Philippines) and issued Executive Order No. 30, he simply
carried out the purpose of the trust in establishing the Cultural Center of the Philippines as the instrumentality
through which this agreement between the two governments would be realized. Needless to state, the President
alone cannot and need not personally handle the duties of a trustee for and in behalf of the Filipino people in
relation with this trust. He can do this by means of an executive order by creating as he did, a group of persons,
who would receive and administer the trust estate, responsible to the President. As head of the State, as chief
executive, as spokesman in domestic and foreign affairs, in behalf of the estate as parens patriae, it cannot be
successfully questioned that the President has authority to implement for the benefit of the Filipino people by
creating the Cultural Center consisting of private citizens to administer the private contributions and donations
given not only by the United States government but also by private persons." 15

There is impressive juridical support for the stand taken by the lower court. Justice Malcolm in Government of the
Philippine Islands v. Springer 16 took pains to emphasize: "Just as surely as the duty of caring for governmental
property is neither judicial nor legislative in character is it as surely executive." 17 It Would be an unduly narrow or
restrictive view of such a principle if the public funds that accrued by way of donation from the United States and
financial contributions for the Cultural Center project could not be legally considered as "governmental property."
They may be acquired under the concept of dominium, the state as a persona in law not being deprived of such an
attribute, thereafter to be administered by virtue of its prerogative of imperium. 18 What is a more appropriate
agency for assuring that they be not wasted or frittered away than the Executive, the department precisely entrusted
with management functions? It would thus appear that for the President to refrain from taking positive steps and
await the action of the then Congress could be tantamount to dereliction of duty. He had to act; time was of the
essence. Delay was far from conducive to public interest. It was as simple as that. Certainly then, it could be only
under the most strained construction of executive power to conclude that in taking the step he took, he transgressed
on terrain constitutionally reserved for Congress.
This is not to preclude legislative action in the premises. While to the Presidency under the 1935 Constitution was
entrusted the responsibility for administering public property, the then Congress could provide guidelines for such
a task. Relevant in this connection is the excerpt from an opinion of Justice Jackson in Youngstown Sheet & Tube
Co. v. Sawyer: 19 "When the President acts in absence of either a congressional grant or denial of authority, he can
only rely upon his own independent powers, but there is a zone of twilight in which he and Congress may have
concurrent authority, or in which its distribution is uncertain. Therefore, congressional inertia, indifference or
quiescence may sometimes, at least as a practical matter, enable, if not invite, measures on independent presidential
responsibility. In this area, any actual test of power is likely to depend on the imperative of events and
contemporary imponderables rather than on abstract theories of law." 20 To vary the phraseology, to recall Thomas
Reed Powell, if Congress would continue to keep its peace notwithstanding the action taken by the executive
department, it may be considered as silently vocal. In plainer language, it could be an instance of silence meaning
consent. The Executive Order assailed was issued on June 25, 1966. Congress until the time of the filing of the
Gonzales v. Marcos G.R. No. L-31685 4 of 5

petition on August 26, 1969 remained quiescent. Parenthetically, it may be observed that petitioner waited until
almost the day of inaugurating the Cultural Center on September 11, 1969 before filing his petition in the lower
court. However worthy of commendation was his resolute determination to keep the Presidency within the bounds
of its competence, it cannot be denied that the remedy, if any, could be supplied by Congress asserting itself in the
premises. Instead, there was apparent conformity on its part to the way the President saw fit to administer such
governmental property.
3. The futility of this appeal by certiorari becomes even more apparent with the issuance of Presidential Decree No.
15 on October 5, 1972. As contended by the Solicitor General, the matter, as of that date, became moot and
academic. Executive Order No. 30 was thus superseded. The institution known as the Cultural Center is other than
that assailed in this suit. In that sense a coup de grace was administered to this proceeding. The labored attempt of
petitioner could thus be set at rest. This particular litigation is at an end. There is, too, relevance in the observation
that the aforesaid decree is part of the law of the land. So the Constitution provides. 21

4. It only remains to be added that respondents as trustees lived up fully to the weighty responsibility entrusted to
them. The task imposed on them was performed with competence, fidelity, and dedication. That was to be
expected. From the inception of the Marcos Administration, the First Lady has given unsparingly of herself in the
encouragement and support of literary, musical, and artistic endeavors and in the appreciation of our rich and
diverse cultural heritage. The rest of the then Board of Trustees, named as the other respondents, were equally
deserving of their being chosen for this worthy project. One of them, the late I.P Soliongco, was in his lifetime one
of the most gifted men of letters. Father Horacio de la Costa is a historian and scholar of international repute.
Respondents Ernesto Rufino, Antonio Madrigal and Andres Soriano, all men of substance, have contributed in time
and money to civic efforts. It is not surprising then that the Cultural Center became a reality, the massive and
imposing structure constructed at a shorter period and at a lower cost than at first thought possible. What is of even
greater significance, with a portion thereof being accessible at modest admission prices, musical and artistic
performances of all kinds are within reach of the lower-income groups. Only thus may meaning be imparted to the
Constitutional provision that arts and letters shall be under State patronage. 22 For equally important as the
encouragement and support for talented Filipinos with a creative spark is the diffusion of the opportunity for the
rest of their countrymen to savour the finer things in life. Who knows, if state efforts along these lines are
diligently pursued, that what was said by Justice Holmes about France could apply to the Philippines. Thus: "We
have not that respect for art that is one of the glories of France." 23 In justice to petitioner Gonzales, it may be
noted that he did not question the wisdom or soundness of the goal of having a Cultural Center or the disbursement
of the funds by respondents. It is the absence of statutory authority that bothered him. The lower court did not see
things in the same light. It is easily understandable why, as the preceding discussion has made clear, it cannot be
said that such a conclusion suffered from legal infirmity. What is more, with the issuance of Presidential Decree
No. 15, the suit, to repeat, has assumed a moot and academic character.
WHEREFORE, this appeal by certiorari to review the lower court's order of dismissal dated December 4, 1969 is
dismissed.
No costs.
Makalintal, C.J., Barredo, Esguerra, Muoz Palma, Aquino, Concepcion Jr. and Martin JJ., concur.
Castro and Makasiar, JJ., took no part.
Gonzales v. Marcos G.R. No. L-31685 5 of 5

Teehankee and Antonio, JJ., are on leave.

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